Utility functions

1. ⇒ أبل

أَبِلَ, aor. ـَ{يَأْبَلُ}; (Ṣ, M, Ḳ;) and أَبَلَ, aor. ـُ{يَأْبُلُ}; (Ḳ;), inf. n. أَبَالَةٌ, (Ṣ, M, Ḳ,) of the former verb, (Ṣ, M, TA,) or, accord. to Sb, إِبَالَةٌ, because it denotes an office, and, if so, of the latter verb, (TA,) and أَبَلٌ, (M, Ḳ,) which is of the former verb, (M, TA,) and أَبَلَةٌ[like غَلَبَةٌ]; (T;)He(a man, Ṣ)was, or became, skilled in the good management of camels(Ṣ, M, Ḳ) and of sheep or goats.(M, Ḳ.)إِبَالَةٌ, like كِتَابَةٌ[in measure], signifies The management, or tending,(A, Ḳ, TA,)ofمَال[meaning camels or other beasts]. (A, TA.) You say, هُوَ حَسَنُ الإِبَالَةِHe is good in the management, or tending, of hisمال[or camels, &c.]. (A, TA.)

Also أُبَلَتِ الإِبِلُ, (Ṣ, M, Ḳ,) and the like is said of wild animals, (Ṣ, M,) or others, (Ḳ,) aor. ـُ{يَأْبُلُ} and ـِ{يَأْبِلُ}, inf. n. أُبُولٌ(Ṣ, M, Ḳ) and أَبْلٌ; (M, Ḳ;) and أَبِلَت; and↓تأبّلت; (M, Ḳ;)The camels were content, or satisfied, with green pasture, so as to be in no need of water:(Ṣ, M, Ḳ:) the last verb is mentioned by Z, and he says that it is tropical, and hence أَبِيلٌ applied to “a monk.“(TA.)

[Hence also]أَبَلَ, (Ḳ,)inf. n. أَبْلٌ, (TA,) ‡ He devoted himself to religious exercises; or became a devotee;(Ḳ, TA;) as also أَبُلَ, like فَقُهَ, inf. n. أَبَالَةٌ: or this signifies he became a monk.(TA.)

8. ⇒ ائتبل

لَا يَأْتَبِلُ, (Ṣ, M, Ḳ,) in the O ↓لا يَتَأَبِّلُ, (TA,)He does not, or will not, keep firmly, or steadily, to the pasturing of camels, nor tend them well;(M, Ḳ;)he does not, or will not, manage them, or take care of them, in such manner as to put them in good condition:(Aṣ, AʼObeyd, T, Ṣ:) or it signifies, (M, Ḳ,) or signifies also, (Ṣ,)he does not, or will not, keep firmly, or steadily, upon them when riding them;(T, Ṣ, M, Ḳ, TA;) used in this sense by a man excusing himself for not putting on a camel his aged father who was walking. (T.)

إِبْلٌ

أَبَلٌ

أَبِلٌ

أَبِلٌSkilled in the good management of camels(Ṣ, M, Ḳ) and of sheep or goats;(M, Ḳ;) as also↓آبِلٌ: (Ṣ, M, Ḳ:) and أَبِلٌ بِالإِبِلِ, and in poetry ↓إِبْلٌ, skilled in the management, or care, of camels.(T.)

Root: ابل - Entry: أَبِلٌ―Signification: A2

A man possessing camels;(Fr, M, Ḳ;) as also↓آبِلٌ, (M, Ḳ,) similar to تَامِرٌ and لَابِنٌ, (Ḥam p. 714,) but this is disapproved by Fr; (TA;) and↓إِبَلِىٌّ, (Ṣ, M, O,) with fet-ḥ to the ب(Ṣ, O,) because several kesrehs together are deemed uncouth; (O;) in the Ḳ, erroneously, ↓أَبَلِىٌّ, with two fet-ḥahs; (TA;) and↓إِبِلِىٌّ also, (M, Ḳ,) with two kesrehs. (Ḳ.)

Root: ابل - Entry: أَبِلٌ―Signification: A3

بَعِيرٌ أَبِلٌA fleshy he-camel.(Ibn-ʼAbbád, Ḳ.)

Root: ابل - Entry: أَبِلٌ―Signification: A4

نَاقَةٌ أبِلَةٌA she-camel blessed, prospered, or made to have increase, in respect of offspring.(Ibn-ʼAbbád, Ḳ.) In one place in the Ḳ, مِنَ الوَلَدِ is put for فِى الوَلَدِ. (TA.)

أُبُلٌ

أُبُلٌ[mentioned in two places in the latter part of the first paragraph,] The خِلْفَةof herbage,(Ḳ,) i. e., of dry herbage;[app. meaning what grows in the season calledالصَّيْف, or summer, among herbage that has dried up;]growing after a year; upon which camels, or the like, fatten.(TA.)

إِبِلٌ

إِبِلٌ(T, Ṣ, M, Mṣb, Ḳ, &c.,) said by Sb to be the only subst. of this form except حِبِرٌ, and to have none like it among epithets except بِلِزٌ; for though other instances are mentioned, they are not of established authority; (Mṣb;) but IJ mentions, with these, حِبِكٌ and إِطِلٌ[which may be of established authority]; (TA;)[and to these may be added إِبِطٌ and إِبِدٌ, and perhaps نِكِحٌ and خِطِبٌ; respecting which see إِبِدٌ;] and for إِبِلٌ one says also ↓إِبْلٌ, (Ṣ, Mṣb, Ḳ, &c.,) sometimes, by way of contraction; (Ṣ, Mṣb;) or this may be a dial. var. of the former; (Kr, MF;)[Camels: and a herd of camels: or]at the least, applied to aصِرْمَة; i. e. a number[of camels]more than aذَوْد[which is at least nine,]up to thirty; after which is the هَجْمَة, i. e. forty and upwards; and then, هُنَيْدَةُ, which is a hundred of إِبِل: (T:) or, accord. to Ibn-ʼAbbád, a hundred ofإِبِل: (TA:) it is a quasi-pl. n.; (Az, Ṣ, ISd, Z, O, Mṣb, &c.;) a word having no proper sing.; (Ṣ, M, O, Mṣb;) and is of the fem. gender, because the quasi-pl. n. that has no proper sing. is necessarily fem. (Ṣ, O, Mṣb) when not applied to human beings, (Ṣ, O,) or when applied to irrational beings, (Mṣb,) and has ة added in the dim.; (Ṣ, Mṣb;)the dim. of إِبِلٌ being ↓أُبَيْلَةٌ: (Ṣ, Mṣb, Ḳ:) it is said in the Ḳ that it is a sing. applied to a pl. number, and is not a pl., nor a quasi-pl. n.; but in this assertion together with the saying that the dim. is as above is a kind of contradiction; for if it be a sing., and not a quasi-pl. n., what is the reason of its being fem.? (TA:) the pl. is آبَالٌ(Ṣ, M, Mṣb, Ḳ) and أَبِيلٌ[like عَبِيدٌpl. of عَبْدٌ, q. v.]; (Mṣb, TA;) the pl. meaning herds[of camels]; and in like manner أَغْنَامٌ and أَبْقَارٌ mean flocks of sheep or goats and herds of bulls or cows: (Mṣb, TA:) and the dual, إِبلَانِ, means two herds[of camels], (Sb, T, Ṣ, M, Mṣb,) each with its pastor; (T;) like as غَنَمَانِ means two flocks of sheep or goats: (Ṣ:) or, accord. to Ibn-ʼAbbád, the dual means two hundreds ofإِبِل. (TA.)

Root: ابل - Entry: إِبِلٌ―Signification: A2

الإِبِلُ الصُّغْرَى[The smaller camels] is an appellation applied to sheep; because they eat more than goats. (IAạr in TA art. ضبط.)

Root: ابل - Entry: إِبِلٌ―Signification: A3

It is said in the Ḳur [lxxxviii. 17], أَفَلَا يَنْظُرُونَ إِلَى ٱلْإِبِلِ كَيْفَ خُلِقَتْ, meaning, accord. to 'Aboo-Amr Ibn-El-ʼAlà, (T, TA,) ‡ [Will they not then consider]the clouds that bear the water for rain,[how they are created?](T, Ḳ, TA:) but accord. to him who reads الإِبْلِ, the meaning is, the camels.(T, TA.)

أُبْلَةٌ

أُبْلَةٌA blight, blast, taint, or the like:(T, Ḳ:) thus written by IAth, agreeably with the authority of Aboo-Moosà; (TA;) occurring in a trad., in which it is said that one should not sell dates until he is secure from الاُبْلَةٌ; (T, TA;) but accord. to a commentary on the Nh, it is correctly written ↓أَبَلَةٌ[q. v.](TA.)

إِبْلَةٌ

إِبْلَةٌEnmity; hostility.(Kr, M, Ḳ.)

أَبَلَةٌ

أَبَلَةٌUnwholesomeness and heaviness of food;(Ṣ, M, Ḳ;) originally وَبَلَةٌ, like as أَحَدٌ is originally وَحَدٌ; (Ṣ;) as also↓أَبَلٌ. (Ḳ.) It is said in a trad. that this departs from every property for which the poor-rate has been paid. (Ṣ, M.)

A consequence of an action, or a claim which one seeks to obtain for an injury; and a cause of blame or dispraise: having these meanings in the saying, إِنْ فَعَلْتَ ذَاكَ فَقَدْ خَرَجْتَ مِنْ أَبَلَتِهِ[If thou do that, thou wilt escape from its consequence,, &c.]. (T.)

Root: ابل - Entry: أَبَلَةٌ―Signification: A6

A fault, vice, or the like.(Aboo-Málik, T.) So in the saying, مَا عَلَيْكَ فِى هٰذَا الأَمْرِ أَبَلَةٌ[There is not to be charged against thee, in this affair, any fault,, &c.]. (T.)

إِبِلِىٌّ

أَبِيلٌ

أَبِيلٌ † A Christian monk;(Ṣ M, Mṣb, Ḳ;) so called because of his abstaining (لِتَأَبُلِهِ) from women: (TA:) or the chief monk:(T:) or a derotee:(TA:) or an old man, or elder:(M:) or the chief, or head-man, of the Christians:(M, Ḳ:) or the man who calls them to prayer by means of theنَاقُوس; (AHeyth, M,* Ḳ;) the beater of theناقوس: (IDrd:) as also↓أَيْبَلِىٌّ, (M and Ḳ, but according to the M as meaning “a monk,”) which is either a foreign word, or changed by the relative ى, or of the same class as إِنْقَحْلٌ[in which the first letter as well as th second is augmentative], for Sb says that there is not in the language an instance of the measure فَيْعَلٌ; (M;) and↓أَيْبُلِىٌّ, and هَيْبَلِىٌّ, and↓أَبُلِىٌّ and↓أَيْبَلٌ, (Ḳ,) which last is disallowed by Sb for the reason stated above; (TA;) and↓أَيْبُلٌ like أَيْنُقٌ; and↓أَيْبِلِىٌّ; (Ḳ;) the last with fet-ḥ to the hemzeh, and kesr to the ب, and with the [first]ى quiescent; or أَيْبَلِىٌّ[app. a mistranscription for أَيْبِلِىٌّ] is used by poetic licence for↓أَبِيلِىٌّ, like أَيْنُقٌ for أَنْوُقٌ: (TA:) pl. آبَالٌ(M, Ḳ) and أُبْلٌ, or أُبُلٌ, [accord. to different copies of the Ḳ,] with damm [which indicates that the former is meant, though it is irregular]. (Ḳ.) By أَبِيلٌ الأَبِيلِينَ is meant ʼEesà[or Jesus], (Ṣ, Ḳ,)the Messiah.(Ṣ.)

أُبَالَةٌ

إِبَالَةٌ

Also A bundle of firewood;(T, Ṣ, Mṣb;) and so↓إِبَّالَةٌ: (T, Ṣ:) or a great bundle of firewood; and so↓أُبَالَةٌ and بُلَةٌ(Ḳ) and↓إِبَّالَةٌ: (Bḍ in cv. 3; but there explained only as signifying a great bundle:) or a bundle of dry herbage;(M, TA;) and so↓إِبَّالَةٌ(Ḳ) and↓أَبِيلٌ and↓أَبِيلَةٌ(M, Ḳ) and↓إِيبَالَةٌ, (Ḳ, [in the CK اَيْبَالَة,]) with one of the two ب s changed into ى, and mentioned by Az, but it is said in the Ṣ and O that this is not allowable, because this change may not be made in a word of the measure فِعَّالَةٌ, with ة, but only in one without ة, as in the cases of دِينَارٌ and قِيرَاطٌ; (TA;) and وَبِيلَةٌ signifies the same, (Ḳ,) belonging to art. وبل. (TA.) Hence the prov., (Ṣ, TA,)صِغْثٌ عَلَى إِبَالَةٍ and↓إِبَّالَةٍ, (Ṣ, Ḳ, &c.,) but the former is the more common, and↓إِيبَالَةٍ, which is allowed by Az but disallowed by J; (TA;)[lit. A handful of herbage, or the like, upon a bundle, or great bundle, of firewood, or a bundle of dry herbage;] meaning † a trial, or trying event, upon another(Ṣ, O, Ḳ)that had happened before:(Ṣ, O:) or plenty (خِصْبٌ) upon plenty; as though bearing two contr. significations. (Ḳ.)

أَبِيلِىٌّ

أَبَابِيلٌ

أَبَّالٌ

إِبَّالٌ

إِبَّوْلٌ

إِبَّوْلٌ, (T, Ṣ, M, Mṣb, Ḳ,) like عِجَّوْلٌ, (Ṣ, Mṣb, Ḳ, [in the CK, erroneously, عَجُول,])A separate, or distinct, portion of a number of birds, and of horses, and of camels, (M, Ḳ,) and of such following one another; (Ḳ;) as also↓إِبِّيلٌ and↓إِبَّالَةٌ, (M, Ḳ,) and↓إِبَالَةٌ, and↓إِيْبَالٌ: (Ḳ:) or it signifies a bird separating itself from the row of other birds;(T, TA;) accord. to IAạr. (TA.) It is said to be the sing. of ↓أَبَابِيلٌ: (T, Ṣ, M, and Jel in cv. 3:) Ks says, I used to hear the grammarians say that this latter has for its sing. إِبَّوْلٌ, like عِجَّوْلٌ, of which the pl. is عَجَاجِيلٌ: (Mṣb:) or its sing. is ↓إِبِّيلٌ; (Ṣ, Mṣb;) but he who says this adds, I have not found the Arabs to know a sing. to it: (Ṣ:) or each of these is its sing.; (M, Jel;) and so is ↓إِبَّالٌ: (Jel:) or its sing. is ↓إِبَّالَةٌ, (Bḍ in cv. 3, and Mṣb,) originally signifying “a great bundle:” (Bḍ:) it is said that this seems to be its sing.; and so↓أَبَّالَةٌ: or the sing. may be ↓إِيبَالَةٌ, like as دِينَارٌ is sing of دَنَانِيرٌ: (T:) or it has no sing., (T, Ṣ, M, Bḍ, Mṣb, Ḳ,) accord. to Fr (T, Mṣb) and Akh (Ṣ) and AO, (T, M,) like شَمَاطِيطُ(Fr, T, Bḍ) and عَبَادِيدٌ. (AO, M, Bḍ.)أَبَابِيلٌ signifies, accord. to some, A company in a state of dispersion:(M:) or dispersed companies, one following another:(Mṣb:) or distinct, or separate, companies,(Akh, Ṣ, Mṣb, Ḳ,)like leaning camels:(Mṣb:) or companies in a state of dispersion.(AO, Mṣb.) One says, جَآءَتْ إِبِلُكَ أَبَابِيلَThy camels came in distinct, or separate, companies.(Akh, Ṣ.) And طَيْرٌ أَبَابِيلُ[in the Ḳur cv. 3 means Birds in distinct, or separate, flocks or bevies]: (Akh, Ṣ:)[or]birds in companies from this and that quarter: or following one another, flock after flock:(Zj, T:) or † birds in companies;(Bḍ, Jel;) likened to great bundles, in respect of their compactness. (Bḍ.)[Respecting these birds, Fei, in the Mṣb, quotes many fanciful descriptions, which I omit, as absurd.]

أَبَّالَةٌ

إِبَّالَةٌ

آبَلٌ

آبَلٌMore, and most, skilled in the good management of camels. (Ṣ, M, Ḳ, TA.) Hence the prov., آبَلُ مِنْ حُنَيْفِ الحَنَاتِمِ[More skilled, &c. than Honeyf-el-Hanátim]. (TA.) And the phrase, هُوَ مِنْ آبِلَ النَّاسِ[He is of the most skilled, &c. of men]. (Ṣ, M, Ḳ.) Mentioned by Sb, who says that there is no verb corresponding to it. (M.)[But see 1, first signification.]

آبِلٌ

إِبِلٌ أَوَابِلٌ, (Ṣ, M, Ḳ,) and أُبَّلٌ, and أُبَّالٌ, (M,)[all pls. of آبِلٌ or آبِلَةٌ,] and↓مُؤَبَّلَةٌ, (M,)Many, or numerous, camels:(Ṣ, M, Ḳ:) or this, [app. meaning the last,] as some say, put in distinct herds;(M;) and so أُبَّالٌ: (TA:) or gotten, gained, or acquired, for permanent possession:(M:) this last is the meaning of the last of the epithets above. (Ṣ, Ḳ.)

Root: ابل - Entry: آبِلٌ―Signification: A3

آبِلٌ, applied to a camel, also signifies Content, or satisfied, with green pasture, so as to be in no need of water: pl. أُبَّالٌ: (Ṣ, Ḳ:) and so أَوَابِلُ, applied to she-camels, (T,* TA,) and to wild animals. (Ṣ in art. بل.)

Root: ابل - Entry: آبِلٌ―Signification: A4

And إِبِلٌ آبِلَةٌCamels seeking by degrees, or step by step, or bit by bit, after the أُبُل[q. v.], i. e. theخِلْفَةof the herbage or pasture.(TA.)

Root: ابل - Entry: آبِلٌ―Signification: A5

And إِبِّلٌ أُبَّلٌCamels left to themselves,(Ṣ, M, Ḳ, TA,)without a pastor.(TA.)